Saturday, January 31, 2015

Star Wars Jedi Knight 2 Jedi Outcast_Force Powers_Push

Force Push
Duration: Instantaneous effect
Area of Effect: Objects or Persons
Energy Cost: 1 points
Effect: allows Jedi to push objects away from himself and defend himself from missile and Force Grip attacks

Sample Force Push 
Rank 1 - Jedi uses the Force to push a specific enemy or object focused on.

Rank 2 - Jedi uses the force to push back multipl enemies or objects in a limited arc.

Rank 3 - Jedi can push back multiple enemies with enough force to do damage by pushing the enemies into solid surfaces or ledges. You can also use it to attempt to break saber locks.

Force Push seems like a basic force power that's only good for moving crates and boxes. However, it's one of the best skills for experienced Jedi.

Pushing over enemies is a great way to delay them. While they're trying to get up, you can run over and slice them with your lightsaber. Even better, you can push enemies into pits, or at higher levels, into walls and objects for damage.


Force Push is a crucial skill against the harder Reborn and Shadow Troopers you encounter. These enemies are tough and one of the best ways to hit them is when they're down on the ground. If you can catch them at a vulnerable time, like when they're jumping in the air, you can knock them to the ground, run up, and chop away as they get up.


Star Wars Jedi Knight 2 Jedi Outcast_Force Powers

Force Powers


While you won't have any skills with the force as you start your game, over time you will learn a wide variety of force abilities. Most anything you've seen in the Star Wars movies (pulling a gun from someone's hands, jumping 20 feet into the air, mind tricks) can be done in this game.

Keep in mind that you have 14 force energy points at full power. When you use them, they will slowly replenish. Use your force powers wisely, because your energy can be eaten up quickly.

List of Force Powers

1. Force Push

Force Lightning
2. Force Pull

3. Force Speed

4. LightSaber Throw

5. Force Jump

6. Force Heal

7. Force Lightning

8. Force Grip

9. Mind Trick

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Star Wars Jedi Knight 2 Jedi Outcast_Character List

Good and Bad Characters in JK2JO


Good Characters
Luke (Good)
Jan (Good)
Kyle (Good)
Monmothma (Good)
Jeditrainer (Good)
Jedi (Good)
Jedi2 (Good)
Rebel (Good)
Prisoner (Good)
Prisoner2 (Good)
Bespincop (Good)
Lando (Good)

Desann (Bad)
Tavion (Bad)
Ugnaught (Bad)
Galak (Bad)
Galak_mech (Bad)
Bad Characters
Reelo (Bad)
Weequay (Bad)
Imperial (Bad)
Rodian (Bad)
Probe (Bad)
Remote (Bad)
Interrogator (Bad)
Sentry (Bad)
Proto (Bad)
Mouse (Bad)
Mark1 (Bad)
Atst (Bad)
Rockettroper (Bad)
Stormtrooper (Bad)
Stormtrooper2 (Bad)
Stormpilot (Bad)
Swamptrooper (Bad)
Stofficer (Bad)
Reborn (Bad)
Rebornacrobat (Bad)
Rebornforceuser (Bad)
Rebornboss (Bad)
Rebornfencer (Bad)
Gran (Bad)
Granshooter (Bad)
Trandoshan (Bad)
Stofficeralt (Bad)
Stcommander (Bad)
Impworker (Bad)
Impcommander (Bad)
Impofficer (Bad)
Droids
Bartender (Bad)
Minemonster (Bad)


Gonk (Droid)
Protocol (Droid)
Protocol_imp (Droid)
R2d2 (Droid)
R2d2_imp (Droid)
R5d2 (Droid)

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Star Wars Jedi Knight 2 Jedi Outcast_Kyle Katarn

The Master Character (Hero)

Kyle Katarn
Kyle Katarn is the role that is played by us in this game, Star Wars Jedi Knight 2 Jedi Outcast. According to the story in Star Wars JK2JO, Kyle is initially a normal human. As he heard that Jan Ors has dead he becomes a Jedi. Learns force powers and gets the lightsaber.

Kyle Katarn is a master fictional character in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, who appears in the five video games of the Jedi Knight series, the video game Star Wars: Lethal Alliance, and in several books and other material. In the Jedi Knight series, Katarn is the protagonist of Star Wars: Dark Forces and Star Wars Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II, one of two playable characters in Star Wars Jedi Knight: Mysteries of the Sith, the protagonist of Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast and a major NPC in Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy.

Katarn was originally a member of the Galactic Empire, before becoming a mercenary for hire. He regularly worked for the Rebel Alliance and later became a member of the New Republic as well as a skilled Jedi and an instructor at the Jedi Academy, second only to Luke Skywalker.

Katarn has been well received by most critics, with GameSpot including him in a vote for the greatest video game character of all time, where he was eliminated in round two, when facing Lara Croft.

Video-game listings in name of Kyle Katarn:
  1. Star Wars: Empire at War (2006)
  2. Star Wars: Jedi Knight - Jedi Academy (2003)
  3. Star Wars: Jedi Knight II - Jedi Outcast (2002)
  4. Star Wars: Jedi Knight - Mysteries of the Sith (1998) 
  5. Star Wars: Jedi Knight - Dark Forces II (1997)
  6. Star Wars: Dark Forces (1995)

Star Wars Jedi Knight 2 Jedi Outcast

Overview

Released in May of the year(2002), the PC version of Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast impressed our PC team enough to earn an editors' choice award, and the Xbox port is garnering similar accolades from our friends over at IGN Xbox.

Sadly, the game didn't transition as well to GameCube. While the Star Wars look and feel as well as many of the game's great gameplay elements remain intact, the game falls graphically well below the other versions and lacks the fine-tuned controls of the PC original.

The Facts
  • First-person and third-person gameplay
  • Expanded and enhanced use of the lightsaber features a slew of attack and defense moves
  • Tap into the powers of the Force including Jump, Push, Jedi Mind Tricks and more
  • Employ combat or stealth, depending on the situation
  • Battle with an arsenal of weapons: stun baton, Bryar blast pistol, blaster rifle and more
  • Explore authentic Star Wars locales -- Cloud City, the Jedi Academy on Yavin 4, Nar Shaddaa, the smugglers' moon, plus never-before-seen locations
  • Two-player multiplayer modes include Jedi training and team-based play
  • Developed in conjunction with the critically acclaimed Raven Software using Quake III engine Gameplay

The main story puts players in the role of Kyle Katarn, the sometimes Jedi Knight who has to get reacquainted in the ways of The Force if you're going to see him through this latest adventure. This part of the game has you blasting your way through new and familiar locales throughout the classic Star Wars Universe that everybody likes and even has you running into icons like Lando Calrissian and some Skywalker guy. Jedi Knight's main appeal lies in the assortment of weapons and force abilities you'll acquire from mission to mission. As Kyle, you're developing into a Jedi with all sorts of skills and abilities at your disposal that you will need as the game presses on.


What works for a third-person viewpoint doesn't necessarily work for first-person shooting. Once you get the lightsaber, the controls work out much better.
The game takes off when you finally get your hands on your lightsaber (on Yavin IV, say about 35% through the game). Before that you're merely playing a first-person shooter. Granted it's an FPS with Imperial stormtroopers, blaster rifles and thermal detonators, but taking hold of a Jedi's weapon of peace and justice literally changes everything about Jedi Knight II. Developer Raven's greatest accomplishment with this engine is the seamless transitions it makes between first-person and third-person perspectives just to accommodate the lightsaber combat system. The lightsaber control mechanism itself can take some getting used to since you simply use the same buttons for primary and secondary attacks just like you do every other weapon and unleashing automated saber swings like this doesn't feel natural initially.

Health Benefits through Gaming


1. Video games are therapeutic for children with chronic illnesses

The University of Utah released a study last year that examined the effects of regular gaming on children diagnosed with illnesses like autism, depression, and Parkinson's disease. Kids who played certain games, including one designed just for the study, showed signs of improvement in "resilience, empowerment, and a 'fighting spirit.'" Researchers believe the games' ability to act on "neuronal mechanisms that activate positive emotions and the reward system" helped improve kids' demeanors as they faced the daily challenges of their illnesses.

2. Video games improve preschoolers' motor skills

Letting a 4-year-old sit in front of a TV with a game controller might not seem like the most productive use of her time. But researchers from Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia, would disagree. Their study examined the development of 53 preschool-aged children, and found that those who played "interactive games" had better "object control motor skills" than those who didn't. It's not clear, though, whether children with better-than-average motor skills tend to gravitate toward video games in the first place.

3. Video games reduce stress and depression

2009's Annual Review of Cybertherapy and Telemedicine included a study that found that gamers who suffered from mental health issues such as stress and depression were able to vent their frustration and aggression by playing video games — and showed a noted improvement. The study hypothesized that games gave certain "Type A" personalities time to relax in "a state of relative mindlessness" that allowed them to avoid reaching "a certain level of stressful arousal" as they tried to relax.

4. Video games provide pain relief

Video games don't just provide relief from emotional pain. They can also help those who are suffering from physical pain. Psychologists at the University of Washington developed a game that helps hospital patients suffering from immense physical pain by using an age-old mental trick: distraction. The virtual reality game "Snow World" put patients in an arctic wonderland in which they throw an endless arsenal of snowballs at a series of targets, such as penguins and snowmen. Military hospitals found the experience helped soldiers recovering from their battlefield wounds. The soldiers who played "Snow World" required less pain medicine during their recuperation.

5. Video games can improve your vision

Mom may have warned you that sitting in front of the TV wasn't good for your eyes. But one developmental psychologist found it could actually be beneficial to your vision. Dr. Daphen Maurer of the Visual Development Lab of Ontario's McMaster University made a surprising discovery: People suffering from cataracts can improve their vision by playing first-person shooter games like Medal of Honor and Call of Duty. She believes these games are so fast-paced that they require an extreme amount of attention, training the visually impaired to view things more sharply. They can also produce higher levels of dopamine and adrenaline that "potentially may make the brain more plastic," she said.
Even this is brain tactic game

6. Video games improve your decision-making skills

Most video games require fast reactions and split-second decisions that can mean the difference between virtual life and virtual death. Cognitive neuroscientists at the University of Rochester in New York found these games give players' brains plenty of practice for making decisions in the real world. Researchers suggest that action-oriented games act as a simulator for the decision-making process by giving players several chances to infer information from their surroundings and forcing them to react accordingly.

7. Video games keep you happy in old age

Researchers from North Carolina State University looked closely at our aging population to see if there was a link between playing video games and mental well-being — i.e. "happiness." They found that senior citizens who said they played video games — even occasionally — reported "higher levels of happiness, or well-being," says Rick Nauert at PsychCentral. "Those who did not play video games reported more negative emotions" and were more likely to be depressed. It's unclear what exactly is behind this link — or if the relationship is even causal.
                               


Thanks to Danny Gallagher for such a nice beneficial message. 

When Gaming Is Good for You

Videogames can change a person's brain and, as researchers are finding, often that change is for the better.


Videogames have stirred both fervent fandom and controversy but all the keyboard taps, mouse clicks and joystick jiggles create a wealth of data that researchers are using to study how the games may affect behavior and even influence cognitive skills. WSJ's Lee Hotz reports.

A growing body of university research suggests that gaming improves creativity, decision-making and perception. The specific benefits are wide ranging, from improved hand-eye coordination in surgeons to vision changes that boost night driving ability.

People who played action-based video and computer games made decisions 25% faster than others without sacrificing accuracy, according to a study. Indeed, the most adept gamers can make choices and act on them up to six times a second—four times faster than most people, other researchers found. Moreover, practiced game players can pay attention to more than six things at once without getting confused, compared with the four that someone can normally keep in mind, said University of Rochester researchers. The studies were conducted independently of the companies that sell video and computer games.

Scientists also found that women—who make up about 42% of computer and videogame players—were better able to mentally manipulate 3D objects, a skill at which men are generally more adept. Most studies looked at adults rather than children.

Electronic gameplay has its downside. Brain scans show that violent videogames can alter brain function in healthy young men after just a week of play, depressing activity among regions associated with emotional control, researchers at Indiana University recently reported. Other studies have found an association between compulsive gaming and being overweight, introverted and prone to depression. The studies didn't compare the benefits of gaming with such downsides.

The violent action games that often worry parents most had the strongest beneficial effect on the brain. "These are not the games you would think are mind-enhancing," said cognitive neuroscientist Daphne Bavelier, who studies the effect of action games at Switzerland's University of Geneva and the University of Rochester in New York.
Green shows positive willpower
Red shows negative willpower

Computer gaming has become a $25 billion-a year entertainment business behemoth since the first coin-operated commercial videogames hit the market 41 years ago. In 2010, gaming companies sold 257 million video and computer games, according to figures compiled by the industry's trade group, the Entertainment Software Association.

For scientists, the industry unintentionally launched a mass experiment in the neurobiology of learning. Millions of people have immersed themselves in the interactive reward conditioning of electronic game play, from Tetris, Angry Birds, and Farmville, to shooter games and multiplayer, role-playing fantasies such as League of Legend, which has been played 1 billion times or so in the two years since it was introduced.


"Videogames change your brain," said University of Wisconsin psychologist C. Shawn Green, who studies how electronic games affect abilities. So does learning to read, playing the piano, or navigating the streets of London, which have all been shown to change the brain's physical structure. The powerful combination of concentration and rewarding surges of neurotransmitters like dopamine strengthen neural circuits in much the same the way that exercise builds muscles. But "games definitely hit the reward system in a way that not all activities do," he said.

First Blog First Post

Looks great to see my blog.